Chapter 33. Distributed Message Beans in JOnAS 4.1
247
ó
jonas-config-property-name
ô
HostName
ó
/jonas-config-property-name
ô
ó
jonas-config-property-value
ô
hostB
ó
/jonas-config-property-value
ô
ó
/jonas-config-property
ô
The other default settings do not need to be changed.
The
shared queue
is hosted by JORAM server s1. You then need to declare it in JOnAS B’s
joram-admin.cfg
file as follows:
Queue
scn:comp/sharedQueue
The
scn:comp/
prefix is a standard way to specify which JNDI provider should be used. In this
case, the shared queue is bound to JORAM’s distributed JNDI server, and may be retrieved from both
JOnAS A and JOnAS B. To provide this mechanism, both JOnAS servers must provide access to a
standard
jndi.properties
file. For JOnAS A, the file looks as follows, and should be put in its
conf/
directory:
java.naming.factory.url.pkgs
org.objectweb.jonas.naming:fr.dyade.aaa.jndi2
scn.naming.factory.host
hostA
scn.naming.factory.port
16400
For JOnAS B, the file looks as follows, and should be put in the right
conf/
directory:
java.naming.factory.url.pkgs
org.objectweb.jonas.naming:fr.dyade.aaa.jndi2
scn.naming.factory.host
hostB
scn.naming.factory.port
16400
33.4. The Beans
The
simple bean
on JOnAS A needs to connect to its local JORAM server and access the remote
queue. The following is an example of consistent resource definitions in the deployment descriptors:
Standard deployment descriptor:
ó
resource-ref
ô
ó
res-ref-name
ô
jms/factory
ó
/res-ref-name
ô
ó
res-type
ô
javax.jms.ConnectionFactory
ó
/res-type
ô
ó
res-auth
ô
Container
ó
/res-auth
ô
ó
/resource-ref
ô
ó
resource-env-ref
ô
ó
resource-env-ref-name
ô
jms/sharedQueue
ó
/resource-env-ref-name
ô
ó
resource-env-ref-type
ô
javax.jms.Queue
ó
/resource-env-ref-type
ô
ó
/resource-env-ref
ô
Specific deployment descriptor:
ó
jonas-resource
ô
ó
res-ref-name
ô
jms/factory
ó
/res-ref-name
ô
ó
jndi-name
ô
CF
ó
/jndi-name
ô
Summary of Contents for Application Server
Page 1: ...Red Hat Application Server JOnAS User Guide ...
Page 8: ......
Page 22: ...14 Chapter 1 Java Open Application Server JOnAS a J2EE Platform ...
Page 58: ...50 Chapter 3 JOnAS Configuration ...
Page 66: ...58 Chapter 5 JOnAS Class Loader Hierarchy ...
Page 78: ...70 Chapter 6 JOnAS Command Reference ...
Page 80: ......
Page 86: ...78 Chapter 7 Developing Session Beans ...
Page 136: ...128 Chapter 9 Developing Message Driven Beans ...
Page 142: ...134 Chapter 10 Defining the Deployment Descriptor ...
Page 148: ...140 Chapter 11 Transactional Behavior of EJB Applications ...
Page 158: ...150 Chapter 14 EJB Packaging ...
Page 162: ...154 Chapter 15 Application Deployment and Installation Guide ...
Page 164: ......
Page 176: ...168 Chapter 18 WAR Packaging ...
Page 178: ......
Page 184: ...176 Chapter 20 Defining the Client Deployment Descriptor ...
Page 186: ...178 Chapter 21 Client Packaging ...
Page 188: ......
Page 192: ...184 Chapter 23 EAR Packaging ...
Page 194: ......
Page 200: ...192 Chapter 24 JOnAS Services ...
Page 204: ...196 Chapter 25 JOnAS and the Connector Architecture ...
Page 222: ...214 Chapter 27 Ant EJB Tasks Using EJB JAR ...
Page 234: ...226 Chapter 29 Web Services with JOnAS ...
Page 236: ......
Page 260: ...252 Chapter 34 How to use Axis in JOnAS ...
Page 270: ...262 Chapter 36 Web Service Interoperability between JOnAS and BEA WebLogic ...
Page 296: ......